CO2 hydration by immobilized carbonic anhydrase in Robinson–Mahoney and packed-bed scrubbers—Role of mass transfer and inhibitor removal

2012 
Abstract Catalytic hydration of CO 2 using immobilized human carbon anhydrase II was assessed in Robinson–Mahoney and packed-bed scrubbers. To analyze the impact of enzyme on CO 2 abatement, the mass transfer, non-enzymic film and bulk, and enzymic surface reaction steps were deconstructed using a multistage model and an ordered Bi Bi Iso Ping Pong kinetic model for the enzyme-mediated hydration kinetics of CO 2 . Absorption in the Robinson–Mahoney reactor revealed the enzyme was passive while model analysis exposed gas–liquid and liquid–solid mass transfers as severely obstructing enzymic hydration. The packed bed achieved improvements in CO 2 abatement with enzyme-immobilized packings but was found to exhibit low mass transfer to fully exploit the enzyme’s high turnover. Leveraging strategies to lower bicarbonate were thus researched to enhance net CO 2 hydration kinetics by reducing backward dehydration. The most remarkable increase in CO 2 removal was obtained by integrating immobilized-enzyme absorption with microparticle ion-exchange resin to remove in-situ bicarbonate.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    49
    References
    23
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []